Tag Archives: PCI Compliance

Global Data Breach: Update #3

For today’s installment of The Official Merchant Services Blog, we are bringing you the most recent developments of the now infamous Global Payments Data Breach.

Back in March

When we first reported the breach, it had supposedly affected 50,000 cardholders and revolved around a taxi and parking garage company in the New York City area.  Over a short time, media outlets hyped up the story until the alleged number of affected cardholders hit 10,000,000.  Global CEO Paul Garcia estimated that closer to 1.5 million card numbers were compromised. Garcia also said that the breach was “self-reported” and “absolutely contained.”

In a quick response to the breach, Visa decided to remove the Atlanta-based processor from its list of “compliant service providers.”  This meant for the first time, Global would no longer be Payment Card Industry (PCI) compliant, a major problem for one of the world’s largest payment processors.  However, more consequences were to come for Global.

Update # 2

In May we learned that the breach might have actually dated back to June of 2011, a full eight months earlier than previously predicted.  Global stuck by it’s story that that the breach only affected 1.5 million cards or less, and occurred in February 2012.  The initial source of the breach, however, Brian Krebs and his blog krebsonsecurity.com revealed that “a hacker break-in at credit and debit card processor Global Payments Inc. dates back to at least early June 2011, Visa and MasterCard warned in updated alerts sent to card-issuing banks in the past week.”  Krebs also found that Visa and MasterCard were sending periodic alerts to the banks about cards that may need to be re-issued following a security breach at a processor or merchant.

The 3rd time’s the charm

Global Payments executives estimated Thursday that the data breach revealed earlier this year could cost them upwards of $120 million to fix.  A large part of which is an $84 million dollar charge from the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2012 to cover fines and initial remediation costs from the payment card networks.  Global CFO David Mangum said that the company also anticipates breach-related expenses and insurance payments in fiscal 2013 that could total $28 million or more.  All the while, Global is working with a ‘Qualified Security Assessor’ in order to regain the PCI compliance certification they lost when the breach went public.

Tracking Track Data

Track data, is the raw cardholder data contained in a magnetic strip in a credit or debit card.  In late May, Global asserted that only Track 2 data had been lost in the breach, which contains account numbers and expiration dates.  Track 1 data contains cardholder names, addresses and other crucial data.  Global seemed to be insisting that this would lead to less fraud since the thieves could not produce counterfeit cards with the stolen data.  Union Savings Bank, based in Danbury, Conn was one of the banks alerted by Visa and MasterCard early, about potential fraud.  Visa alerted USB that about 1,000 of its debit accounts were compromised in the Global Payments breach.  These details show how Track 2 data alone was enough for criminals to encode the card numbers and expiration dates onto any card equipped with a magnetic strip.  These cards can then be used at any merchant accepting signature debit, any transactions that do not require the cardholder to enter a PIN number.

Host Merchant Service’s PCI Compliance Initiative

Looking at the threat of a data breach, Merchants must wonder what the solution can be. Is there protection available? PCI Compliance is a great foundation for transaction security. The standards and protocols set up by the PCI-DSS Council are the first step a merchant needs to take to protect their data. And Host Merchant Services offers a PCI Compliance Initiative that helps its merchants quickly and seamlessly take that step.

Also, one thing to consider if you are a merchant and you are worried about data breaches affecting your bottom line: Host Merchant Services Data Breach Security Program. Click that link to download a PDF explaining the value-added service HMS provides its merchants that goes above and beyond just simple PCI Compliance and helps ensure a merchant’s peace of mind.

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HMS News: For Our Merchants [2023 Update]

Today The Official Merchant Services Blog is just going to offer a quick update on some services Host Merchant Services provides directly for its current customers. Today our site launched a page for our current merchants to go to in order to access online assistance services. There are currently two:

TRUPCI

We’ve pushed our PCI Compliance Initiative for quite some time now. Host Merchant Services goal is to make it easy for our customers to stay PCI Compliant. The details of the PCI Compliance Initiative are:

  • A Free PCI Compliance Analysis of your business by HMS.
  • A Free PCI Compliance Scan.
  • A report compiled for your business regarding its PCI Compliance issues and what it needs to do to become PCI Compliant.
  • All totaled, this is a suite of services with a $100 value that you get at no extra cost.

And finally we’ve gotten great results from the program. For our current merchants who wish to roll up their sleeves and get into the process with us step-by-step, they can go to their TRUPCI assistant.

LOGIN HERE

Additional Resources 

If you choose to process with HMS, we will also walk you through the entire procedure step by step, making PCI Compliance an easy and hassle free operation for you.

  • You can also access our PCI Compliance FAQ here.
  • And read our step by step guide to becoming PCI Compliant as a level 4 Merchant (the most common level used for PCI Compliance).

Host Merchant Services knows that your business needs secure transactions to function. And we’re here to make the process of PCI Compliance easy, understandable and consistent for you each year.

In House Gateway

We’ve also been pushing our custom designed E-Commerce packages. And part of that offer includes the in-house payment gateway that lets you run your transactions completely online.

To access the Host Merchant Services in-house Payment Gateway:

LOGIN HERE

Internet Security

Security is one of the defining internet issues of this decade.  While there is not one distinct body of law that governs a company’s rights and responsibilities, there are methods to prioritize compliance efforts.  This issue is relatively unique to the internet space since the laws and regulations that apply come from many different areas.  In recent years the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has taken an increasingly prominent role in responding to these problems.  In addition, almost every state has some sort of law that at least requires reporting of unauthorized disclosure of information.  Indeed many state laws, particularly Massachusetts and California, go substantially beyond simple breach disclosure and mitigation.

Host Merchant Services is located in Delaware. The Delaware Security Breach Notification Law can be reviewed in its entirety at This Link.

While many agencies, such as the SEC, have regulations that address security issues in the industries they regulate, the FTC is the agency primarily tasked with addressing internet security issues.  The FTC has the authority to prosecute companies and individuals who engage in deceptive trade practices.  The best way to determine the enforcement priorities of the FTC is to look at recent enforcement actions.  These actions have focused on the “locked door” problem:  Many companies focus on the number of locks they’ve placed on the door to data, as opposed to making sure these doors do not become unlocked over time.

Sloppy security practices are an issue that the FTC has said is simply screaming for regulatory and enforcement activity.

Time and time again, the FTC has stated that companies must have procedures in place to ensure that their businesses are secure, to detect security vulnerabilities, and inform customers and, if necessary,  regulators, when unauthorized disclosures are discovered.  To avoid FTC action, internet businesses need to shift some of their security thinking and strategy from high profile areas to basic security and process control schemes.  This could involve redeploying resources from traditional security screening measures (such as trying to breach firewalls) to creating change control processes, training staff on quality control and ensuring that vendors actually meet the security standards you need — and that they profess to have.

It is a bit trickier to generalize about state security statutes.  That said, most state laws have relatively similar goals to their federal counterparts.  As an initial matter you should ensure that your entire “ecosystem” has the same, or similar, breach definitions.  Doing so avoids gaps that lead to misinformation and failure to comply with breach definitions set out in your state laws.  A second component of general compliance is to create both internal and external notification plans.  Your internal plan should create a system where both employees and vendors are alerted to a possible breach.  External plans should contain at a minimum a statement of what is known about the breach, mitigation efforts, a contact point, and future steps you are taking regarding the breach.  You should identify which information will be excluded from these notification efforts because of confidentiality or other restrictions.

A final component of a state compliance plan is to anticipate how you will fold in state regulators and law enforcement entities.  At a minimum, these will be agencies in the state in which you are located, but may, in some instances, include regulatory agencies in other states.  It is important not to play hide-the-ball and simply fail to provide the regulatory and law enforcement notifications required by law.  In making these notifications, you should involve your attorney to determine how much information you are required to disclose, and methods of protecting your company from litigation.

For More Information

For more legal information you can visit my site:

David Snead’s Home Page

Merchant Services Document Download Graphic

To learn more about PCI Compliance, Host Merchant Services offers these resources:

PCI Compliance FAQ

Merchant Services Document Download Graphic

PCI Compliance Guide

Merchant Services Document Download Graphic

Disclaimer:  Legal decisions must be made based on your unique situation. Please consult with an attorney prior to making decisions based on this post.

Data Breach Solutions

Today The Official Merchant Services Blog has a quick follow up to its ongoing coverage of the Global Payments Data Breach. The past two entries in our blog have taken a sweeping look at the big picture of data breaches and PCI DSS and how effective those security standards are. PCI Compliance is a topic very near and dear to Host Merchant Services because the company pushes an aggressive initiative among its customers to keep them PCI Compliant.

PCI Compliance: The Foundation of Security

Past studies from Verizon and Gartner Research have suggested that business owners slack on their security needs, especially in terms of PCI DSS compliance. The most oft suggested reason for this lax outlook on security has to do with PCI itself not having a lot of traction with those business owners. The merchants tend to think any security issues are the responsibility of the third party processor or the bank or the credit card companies; they don’t see a direct link to their business because of the simple fact that their terminal that swipes cards wasn’t theirs to begin with. Other issues include Merchants getting lost in the complexities of the PCI DSS website and its many forms that need to be filled out, and the recent change to PCI version 2.0 in October 2010 changing the structure of the system. Merchants get distracted by their day to day responsibilities of the business and gloss over the minutiae of PCI compliance.

Host Merchant Services understands these problems. Part of their service mantra is that the company designs payment processing solutions that let their merchants focus on running their company. The general theme is to make payment processing seamless and easy for the merchants. This includes transaction security and was the catalyst that fueled the company’s PCI Compliance Initiative.

But as we’ve seen with the Global Payments Data Breach, security needs to go beyond just PCI Compliance.

An Extra Layer of Protection

This Article from The Data Center Journal suggests that better admin priveleges could have helped stave off The Global Payments Data Breach completely. From the article: “Avecto says that the possibility that the breach was caused by a compromised administrative account that was insufficiently protected shows that governance is a central requirement of modern IT security.”

The article maintains that multiple layers of security can go a long away to helping to prevent future data breaches of this type. Paul Kenyon, chief operating officer with Avecto, said in the article that “Our observations on this breach suggest that minimizing administrative privileges—an exercise in the principle of least privilege—would have gone a long way to preventing the breach.” It was suggested to Kenyon from another IT Security analyst that the privileged accounts that are reportedly at the heart of this breach need several layers of protection to properly insulate them from hackers.

Most articles looking at the aftermath of the data breach arrive at the consensus that security measures need to go beyond just PCI compliance. This article gives some very specific and clear advice on a step to take — a data breach solution.

Data Breach Penalties Stack Up

Yesterday’s blog also delved into the cost and fees companies face when they suffer a data breach.

And this article by Bank Info Security gives even more insight into the cost and impact of a data breach. It interviews Larry Ponemon, founder of the Ponemon Institute, which conducted this year’s Cost of a Data Breach study with sponsorship from Symantec. The study revealed that the average cost of a Data Breach has gone down this year. Which makes sense when you consider that even with the Global Payments Data Breach in the news right now, the scale is a lot smaller than the scale of the Heartland Data Breach.

In fact, this article, also from Bank Info Security, gives a side by side comparison between the much bigger Heartland Data Breach and the Global Payments Data Breach.

But back to Ponemon’s interview and his company’s study: “According to the annual report, the average per capita cost of a data breach has declined from $214 per record to $194 since 2011’s report.”

Ponemon suggests two reasons for the decline in average costs.

  1. Complacency: “We think people in general may be becoming numb to the data breach notification process. Most people have received at least one data breach notice; they may not even be aware of it because they don’t open their mail. The may see it as junk mail.”
  2. Topical Shift, or rather the rise of intellectual property breaches, which are not a part of the annual study: “We focus on one type of data breach – the type of data breach [of personal records] that requires notification in the United States and then other parts of the world – but in reality there are other, maybe more costly, data breaches that companies are experiencing every day.”

 

HMS Data Breach Security Program

The hackers that go after credit card information are a creative group of criminals who are constantly pushing technology forward and tying security systems in knots. Many times a discussion about data breaches ends up with the conclusion that “it’s not if a data breach is going to happen, it’s when a data breach is going to happen.”

Host Merchant Services offers a key resource in preparing a business to tackle that issue: Its Data Breach Security Program. This program protects a business and a merchant can get up to $100,000 in coverage per location for the most common forms of data breach:

  • Employee Dishonesty
  • Skimming
  • Theft of Credit Card Receipts
  • Theft of POS Terminals
  • Stolen Card Numbers
  • Theft of Computers

 

The Data Breach Security Program helps cover fees for any industry-mandated audit of a suspected breach, card replacement costs and related expenses, and industry fines and assessments. All of these fees come from non-compliance with PCI DSS and are fees and issues that any company even suspected of a breach can face as we described yesterday in our blog. The coverage would exceed even the penalties that Cisero’s faces as we saw in the article about their lawsuit targeting the PCI itself.

How Does It Work?

Host Merchant Services makes it easy to file claims once you’ve gotten on board with the Data Breach Security Program. A simple online form starts the process:

  • Step 1: Fill out the online claim form at www.merchantdatabreach.com
  • Step 2: Upload or fax the notice from the acquiring bank, which stipulates that there has been a breach or a suspected breach at your location and choose an authorized, qualified security assesor.
  • Step 3: When the forensic audit is complete, upload or fax a copy of the assessor’s report.
  • Step 4: HMS takes it from there. We process the claim for payment and if all documentation is in order you will receive a check for the expenses incurred from the audit and/or card replacement costs and/or fines incurred for a breach.

To recap

Data Breaches can and will occur. They are costly. The recent Global Payments Data Breach reminds us all how important transaction security is for all parties involved. Merchants need to understand how important PCI Compliance is for their business. And they also need to take more steps than just PCI Compliance. Host Merchant Services is committed to keeping its merchants safe and secure. The company takes the lead in the industry in terms of PCI Standards with its PCI Compliance Initiative. And the company offers added layers of protection to its merchants through its Data Breach Security Program.

pci and data breach

PCI and the Data Breach [2023 Update]

TodayThe Official Merchant Services Blog continues looking at the bigger picture of the impact from the Global Payments Data Breach — specifically looking at the affect it’s going to have on PCI DSS as well as a little foray into State Security Breach Notification Laws.

You’ll remember yesterday we highlighted some of the criticisms found in the PCI DSS, specifically this article by Taylor Armerding which suggested that PCI compliance is not enough to protect data from the skilled and focused hackers who cause these data breaches.

We then focused on how PCI Compliance is still a great foundation for your transaction security. The standards and protocols set up by the council are the first step a merchant needs to take to protect their data. And Host Merchant Services offers a PCI Compliance Initiative that helps its merchants quickly and seamlessly take that step.

Still the idea that PCI DSS is not living up to its billing as security shows itself in this story from Wired about a small business filing suit against against its bank claiming that the financial institution, which used to process the restaurant’s credit and debit card transactions, wrongfully seized money from the business’ merchant bank account. In short, the business is suing the bank for taking funds as penalties for being non-compliant with PCI DSS.

Taking it to Court

The story explains that Stephen and Theodoara “Cissy” McComb, owners of Cisero’s Ristorante and Nightclub in Park City, Utah, racked up $90,000 in fines that Visa and MasterCard imposed after alleging that Cisero’s had failed to secure its network and suffered a data breach that resulted in fraudulent charges on customer bank cards. U.S. Bank seized about $10,000 from the McComb’s merchant account to cover those penalties and then sued the McCombs to obtain the remaining balance on the fines, saying a contract the McCombs signed with the bank makes them liable for such fines.

The McCombs struck back with a bold countersuit. The story explains: “But in their countersuit against U.S. Bank, the McCombs allege that the bank, and the payment card industry (PCI) in general, force merchants to sign one-sided contracts that are based on information that arbitrarily changes without notice, and that they impose random fines on merchants without providing proof of a breach or of fraudulent losses and without allowing merchants a meaningful opportunity to dispute claims before money is seized.”

This suit challenges the basic foundation of PCI security standards and opens up a lot of old wounds and criticisms about PCI DSS in context of the card issuers that make the call and form the council for PCI DSS. As the story says: “The controversial system, imposed on merchants by credit card companies like Visa and MasterCard, has been called a “near scam” by a spokesman for the National Retail Federation and others who say it’s designed less to secure card data than to profit credit card companies while giving them executive powers of punishment through a mandated compliance system that has no oversight.”

The linked article provides much of the details that led to the data breach with Cisero’s, as well as why the fines and penalties were applied according to PCI DSS standards. The McComb countersuit relies heavily on their assertion that PCI DSS oversteps its bounds in applying those penalties, offers no recourse for people to dispute the penalites, and levies penalties against businesses for violations even when no fraudulent transactions occur.

The Cost of a Data Breach

This case above and much of the criticism targeting PCI DSS deals with the fines banks, processors and subsequently merchants face when data gets breached. This article looks into the cost merchants face when the worst case scenario occurs. A lot of merchants feel that lack of compliance isn’t an issue because they feel they are not responsible of something goes awry. But this article sheds some light on that: “suppose you or your merchant is suspected of one of those inevitable human errors, or of being a victim of a hacker. As long as there isn’t actually a breach, it’s no big deal, right? Wrong.”

The article lists the costs of penalties:

  • Forensics Audit done by investigators when they suspect your business is susceptible to a breach: Between $8,000 and $20,000
  • $3 to $10 per card to replace all cards compromised in a breach that happens.
  • $5,000 to $50,000 in fines for lack of compliance.
  • And even further in fines specifically tied to any fraudulent transactions that do occur as a result of the breach.

The article states that the average cost comes to $36,000, a hefty sum that can cripple small businesses. The McComb data breach may seem high in comparison, but going over the huge variance in the fine structure, it’s pretty easy to see how the bank came to a $90,000 figure.

Back to Global Payments

Speaking of the fees and penalties, it’s interesting to note that the company faces many of the same problems that small businesses do now that Global has been breached and run afoul of Visa in terms of PCI Security and  Compliance. However this story for ZDNet states that the company will likely absorb any costs from the data breach and not be affected as badly as some of the small businesses discussed above are affected by fees and penalties.

Global Payments continues to process, even after being dropped by Visa’s list of providers that meet security standards. The company is now working on being reinstated and once again being PCI Compliant. Working in their favor is their statements that they reported the breach to authorities the moment they found out it happened.

Which brings us to …

Security Breach Notification Laws

Security Breach notification laws were enacted in response to an escalating number of breaches of consumer databases containing personal information. The first such law was the California data security breach notification law, or SB 1386. It was enacted in 2002 and became effective on July 1, 2003. Currently 46 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands have enacted similar legislation requiring the notification of security breaches involving personal information. The only states that currently have no such law on their books are Alabama, Kentucky, New Mexico and South Dakota.

  • Host Merchant Services is located in Delaware. The Delaware Security Breach Notification Law can be reviewed in its entirety at This Link.
  • Global Payment Systems is located in Georgia. The Georgia Security Breach Notification Law can be reviewed in its entirety at This Link and its subsequent amendment can be found at This Link.

These laws tend to follow a similar basic structure to the one California passed first in 2002 — companies need to immediately disclose a data breach to customers, usually in writing.  There have since been a number of bills that would establish a national standard for data security breach notification but none have been passed in Congress yet.

The Bottom Line

So what does this all mean? For now it appears that Global is weathering the storm brought on by the news of the data breach. They’ve minimized the impact of the bad news and are working to get their compliance situation straightened out. The data breach has put the spotlight onto the PCI DSS itself and we’ve seen that some small businesses and merchants are highly critical of the system. Comparing the crippling fines they can theoretically face for a breach that leads to no fraud against the impact that a large processor like Global faces for the same type of problem can leave some thinking the system needs more oversight. But PCI DSS does set the bar for security. It forces hackers to work harder than they would if it didn’t exist. It is a first step in terms of what merchants and processors need to do to protect transaction and data security.

The court case in Utah is very fascinating as it really takes the contract aspect of the PCI DSS to task. The Official Merchant Services Blog will continue to follow the news on that case. And we will keep you posted on the latest developments with this Global Payments Data Breach.

Data Breach Consequences [2023 Update]

Today The Official Merchant Services Blog is going to delve into the bigger picture of the impact that the Global Payments Data Breach is going to have on the payment processing industry. Obviously this news is going to have a huge impact on Global Payments itself. The company faces a big penalty after Visa dropped it from its registry of compliant service providers due to “unauthorized access into a portion of (Global Payments’) processing system.”

Fees and penalties related to reacquiring its compliance status and getting back on the registry will add up. In fact an executive from Co3 Systems, a data loss management firm, estimated the potential liability for a merchant with 1 million cards compromised could top $1.6 million from compliance fines alone. With Global’s own official statements indicating that the number of cards that were compromised being less than 1.5 million, the Co3 estimate is probably right in the ballpark of what Global faces.

The company also will take a hit to its business simply because of the breach itself and being dropped by Visa. While they are off the list, some potential customers may not be able to sign with them due to the lack of compliance status. And if the process to be reinstated takes too long, it could affect some of their current customers.

But there’s a larger context that needs to be considered with this data breach: PCI DSS itslef.

We’ve covered PCI Compliance very extensively in the blog. We looked at a report from Verizon last year that suggested 79% of organizations Verizon surveyed were found to be non-compliant in their initial audit in 2010. The study from the previous year had 78% of organizations were non-compliant. A study by Gartner Research demonstrated that 18% of merchants they surveyed were not PCI Compliant at all.

What is PCI?

These studies just underscore the large problem payment processing faces with security. The acronym PCI DSS stands for Payment Card Industry Data Security Standards. PCI Compliance is essentially the process of adhering to the standards set forth by the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standards Council (PCI DSS). You can review those standards in greater detail here. Essentially the standards are a set of requirements designed to ensure that all companies that process, store or transmit credit card information maintain a secure environment.

What’s the Problem?

One of the biggest criticisms of the PCI DSS is that it is the minimum agreed upon set of security protocols. Because of its nature as a consensus set of standards put together by the council, PCI is often criticized for being behind the curve or not being thorough enough to deal with the hackers who are trying to get at the data and breach the security of the transactions. Combine that with the studies that keep showing merchants are not keeping their compliance current or not even becoming compliant in the first place and you open the door for a lot of criticism against the system designed to keep transactions safe and secure.

Taylor Armerding wrote a compelling article for CSO Online on the issue of PCI compliance in the aftermath of the latest data breach.  The lead statement of the article underscores the issue simply and effectively: “The latest data security breach to strike MasterCard and VISA has security experts focusing anew on the good and bad of PCI DSS. On one hand, the standard offers a clear blueprint on how to handle such a breach. On the other hand, compliance is usually not the cure, as this latest incident demonstrates.”

To add emphasis, Armerding quotes Neil Roiter, research director at Corero Network Security, as saying: “The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) is highly prescriptive in nature, but simply complying does not ensure credit card security. Companies that rely on PCI DSS to solely dictate their security measures will continue to remain vulnerable to attack.”

The Weak Link

Armerding’s article suggested that compliance isn’t the be-all-end-all for security and that humans were still weakest link in the system. Quoting Anup Ghosh, founder and CEO of Invincea, a developer of browser protection systems, the article says that too much of the security standards are stuck in the past. Ghosh also suggests that PCI is complacent and easy for hackers to circumvent. Ghosh says that the systems in place are more designed to tell you what happened after the fact, being a reactive solution rather than a proactive solution. Ghosh then suggests that the data that was compromised was likely encrypted, but the security standards are behind the curve where it really counts: The Human Layer of Security.

Ghosh explains: “If I target employees, which is how you target these days, it is not very hard in phishing campaigns, to get employees to open an email or click on a link, which then provides access to their desktop and the privileges that come with it. [And in that case] Encryption is worthless.”

He then suggests a more proactive step of creating a more secure virtual environment for employees to work in so that whatever an employee clicks doesn’t end up compromising any data in the system.

PCI is Still Very Important

What Armerding and Ghosh say about PCI is quite compelling. But they both still point out that PCI Compliance is very important for merchants and payment processors. The standards may be behind the curve with the ever-clever hackers going after credit card data, but they set a starting point for security. They set the bar high enough that hackers have to put in work to circumvent the systems. Having PCI is so much better than not having it — which demonstrates how scary the Verizon and Gartner studies are.

Host Merchant Services advocates and performs a very zealous crusade for PCI Compliance. The company takes data security and safe transactions seriously and makes PCI Compliance a part of its value-added service package. HMS began a PCI Compliance Initiative last year that started with an ad campaign that offered for a limited time free PCI Compliance fees for merchants who signed up during that time. It then extended into an initiative run through a partnership agreement with HostMySite.com that offered a free PCI and Security Analysis to any customer interested, and now that same offer is available to anyone interested in Host Merchant Services, partnership or no partnership. The company provides on-call assistance with PCI Compliance questions and problems and will help all of its merchants get through the process with tips and advice from Host Merchant Services’ own PCI Compliance experts.

Tomorrow The Official Merchant Services Blog will follow up with the latest developments from the data breach, as well as more information about PCI Compliance, and PCI DSS issues that the payments industry and the tech industry are discussing.

For More Information

For more information about PCI Compliance, Host Merchant Services offers these resources:

PCI Compliance FAQ

Merchant Services Document Download Graphic

PCI Compliance Guide

Merchant Services Document Download Graphic

Global Payments Data Breach  [2023 Update]

The Official Merchant Services Blog tackles the big news in the payment processing industry today: The Global Payments Data breach.

The news of this data breach hit on Friday and the weekend has seen some wild speculation tossed about. At first there were reports that a mere 50,000 cards were compromised. Then the media upped the number to 10,000,000. Today Global Payments and the media sources covering the story are reporting that the number is closer to 1.5 million cards.

The Story So Far …

The breach was first reported by blogger Brian Krebs at KrebsonSecurity.com. He said on Friday that Visa and MasterCard were alerting banks across the country about a recent major breach at a U.S.-based credit card processor. The first report cited as many as 10 million cards were compromised. By that afternoon Krebs revealed that the processor was Global Payments, and that the breach was discovered in early March 2012. Krebs cited the breach as occurring between January 21, 2012 and February 25, 2012. The alerts issued by Visa and MasterCard, according to Krebs, stated that Track 1 and Track 2 data was taken — which Krebs said meant that the information could be used to counterfeit new cards.

Then the media got more involved.

The Wall Street Journal followed up Krebs blogging with a story about the breach, making the news official. Global remained silent throughout the day, only confirming the report after the close of the markets and trading.

The rabid interest in the data breach sparked an interesting article by USAToday, which expanded on Krebs’ own reporting. Krebs stated that he had heard from his sources that investigators suspect Dominican street gangs were involved in the fraud, focusing mainly on commercial credit and debit card accounts. The article then cited Garnter banking security analyst Avivah Litan, who claimed that the breach involved a taxi and parking garage company in the New York City area. It was suggested that consumers who had paid for a NYC cab in the previous months using the new swipe technology might be victims of the breach and possible fraud. Litan also said she too had heard about a Central American gang connection.

Global’s Statements

Finally Global Payments started talking. The breach was verified by Global. Paul Garcia, Global’s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement that the breach was reported by the company to the FBI — suggesting that the company promptly identified the breach and reported it to the authorities. They’ve now called it a “self-reported” breach. However, media sources do note that the news about the breach still had to be dragged out into the spotlight by Krebs and his blog.

After confirming the breach Garcia stated that the breach was “absolutely contained” and stated that there had been no “fraudulent transactions” related to the breach.

However, the Green Sheet reported on Friday that Krebs had reported that PSCU Financial, a nonprofit cooperative credit union service organization, told its members 56,455 Visa and MasterCard accounts had been compromised, but fraud was found to have occurred in only 876 accounts so far.

Garcia stated that 1.5 million card numbers were compromised by the breach and re-affirmed that no fraud had taken place related to the compromised cards. “This is manageable,” Garcia said.

Visa Takes Action

In response to the data breach information hitting the spotlight, Visa took action against Global Payments. Visa removed Global Payments, an Atlanta company that helps the payment giant process transactions for merchants, from its list of “compliant service providers.”

Garcia in his statements to the press acknowledged that Visa had removed Global Payments from its compliance list pending resolution and remediation of the breach and that it was working “as expeditiously as possible” to return to compliance. The process would take “not days, but we don’t think it’s months.” In other words, Global was not going to be able to fix their PCI status quickly. Global Payments continues to process Visa cards worldwide according to Garcia.

Both Visa and MasterCard say their own systems weren’t compromised. Both credit card issuers had said Friday that they notified their card holders of the potential for identity theft and illicit charges because of the breach.

The Consequences

Global has not yet identified the size of the charge it will take as a result of the breach. But it is interesting to note that Heartland Payment Systems racked up a cost of $12 million in penalties and legal fees when its data breach compromised more than 120 million credit cards.

The Official Merchant Services Blog will be devoting much of its coverage to this developing story. Tomorrow we’re going to take a look at any updates as well as how this issue fits into the ongoing news regarding PCI security and compliance. Data Breaches have been a topic this blog has covered before. Though we’ve focused more on the breaches that affected video game companies like Sony and Turbine last year, our coverage was written with an eye toward the big picture problem of data breaches in general and compromised credit card information. So expect us to try and tie it all together through our focus this week.

Also …

And one last thing to consider if you are a merchant and you are worried about data breaches affecting your bottom line: Host Merchant Services Data Breach Security Program. Click that link to download a PDF explaining the value-added service HMS provides its merchants that goes above and beyond just simple PCI Compliance and helps ensure a merchant’s peace of mind.

Top Free Online Shopping Carts

Today The Official Merchant Services Blog shifts its focus to the E-Commerce industry — specifically some tips we’ve found online to help small businesses with their e-commerce solution.

An article written by Nova Scotian Vangie Beal details the ins and outs of ten open source online shopping carts that are available to merchants or really anyone who wants to sell things on the internet. Beal’s been covering small business, e-commerce and internet technology for more than a decade with her writing. You can find the original article here.

E-Commerce has become an integral part of the economy throughout the world. Shoppers have embraced online shopping as part of their normal shopping routine. So businesses have responded by jumping into e-commerce and providing those consumers with competitive options that focus on the convenience that can be had with the click of a few buttons — the classic clicks vs. bricks debate is showing that clicks beat bricks.

So what do Merchants need to know about E-Commerce to get started?

Step One: Get A Payment Processor

The first step is something Host Merchant Services can handle — payment processing. Merchants need to accept payment in the form of credit cards and debit cards to stay healthy and viable as a business. So merchants need to incorporate payment processing solutions both in their brick and mortar stores as well as on their website with their online shopping solution. Host Merchant Services provides merchants with these options — along with free equipment and a guaranteed low rate that will save them money.

So step one in setting up your e-commerce business is to get a merchant account, with the services Host Merchant Services provides.

Step Two: Your Online Shopping Cart

Now that you’ve got a merchant account set up and are reedy to process payments online, step two is to get an online shopping cart for your website. As Vangie Beal says in her article, “When shopping for your own e-commerce shopping cart software the most important aspect toconsider is how well the cart software meets your business objectives.”

The shopping cart has to be customizable so that you can alter it to fit your business needs. It also needs to be able to fit your branding so that the shopping cart melds seamlessly with the rest of your website. It needs to be flexible so that as your business grows, your online shopping card and ability to process payments online can also grow. It needs to be secure and it needs to support industry security standards such as PCI compliance.

You can read about PCI Compliance Standards in the Host Merchant Services Article Archive.

We provide a PCI FAQ here. 

We provide a step by step guide on PCI Compliance here.

Open Source Shopping Cart

Vangie Beal’s article discusses the top 10 free or Open Source shopping carts. Beal says “Open source shopping carts are an attractive option. Storeowners might look to open source e-commerce software because it will typically deliver the features and tools to manage a product catalog on a website without the hefty licensing fees that come with proprietary or off-the-shelf packages.”

Continue Reading – Top Free Online Shopping Carts, Part 2